And note that I haven’t read that much of the book. In particular, I expect to like a lot of things about the functional aspects of Scala (described in chapter 8, “Functional Programming in Scala”).

That’s about learning the basics of the language. When I tried to make a small application to access the Flickr API, things worked really smoothly, which is always encouraging: using scalaj-http for the HTTP requests is a breeze, and parsing the resulting XML to get the interesting pieces was also pretty straightforward. Another nice surprise was the ScalaTest library.

Only when I had to start writing a bit more “real-world” code, I had to use some Java libraries. And I have to say, that was by far the worst part of programming in Scala. I only had to make some very simple date calculations, but that turned out to take more or less as long as the rest of the code I had written. Or at least, much more frustration. To write that small piece of code, I had to learn some API that didn’t make any sense to me; it took me a while to find the right, non-deprecated way of doing things; and all along I felt that the designers of that API were more focused on how proud they were of their “correct”, decoupled design that on making it simple and practical for the actual programmers using that library. My impression of the JavaMail library wasn’t actually much better, but at least the first thing I copied and pasted worked well enough.

And before I finish, I wanted to mention a couple of things about tools. Although I’m currently using Emacs, I did give Eclipse and NetBeans a try. Probably those tools are not for me, so take my experience with a pinch of salt, but I found them really confusing or they didn’t work at all for some reason. However, Scala mode and ensime for Emacs worked well for my, for now, limited needs, and frankly, I’d rather stay with Emacs that having to edit code in Eclipse or some other editor.

I still have several things pending, like finishing the Scala book, trying out sbt, experiment more with ensime and the Scala mode and write a library to access the Opera Link API. But it looks like it’s going to be a lot of fun :-)